Friday, August 5, 2016

30,000 rejected for asylum in Sweden and scheduled for deportation have gone missing. Swedish police say they lack resources to track them down. As in the US, if you complain about or disagree with the Swedish government establishment, you're immediately called racist or fascist-Carlqvist, Gatestone Institute

On June 7, it was reported that British citizen Grace "Khadija"
Dare had brought her 4-year-old son, Isa Dare, to live in Sweden, in
order to benefit from free health care. In February, the boy was
featured in an ISIS video, blowing up four prisoners in a car.The boy's
father, a jihadist with Swedish citizenship, was killed fighting for
ISIS.

Not only are fewer people sentenced to deportation -- but more and
more, those who are to be deported refuse to leave the country. In
October of last year, daily newspaper Svenska Dagbladetreported
that 30,000 people whose asylum application had been rejected and were
scheduled for deportation, had gone missing. The police say they lack
the resources to track down these illegals. Patrik Engström, head of the
border police at the Department of National Operations (NOA), told
the paper: "We put these people on the wanted list, but we do not
engage in an active search for them. We wait for tips and things like
that."

June 1: On the evening of May 31, a man was pushed in front of a
speeding subway train in Stockholm. The victim was a 23-year-old Swedish
student at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm. He
received skull fractures and lacerations, lost half his foot, broke his
ribs and collarbone and punctured one of his lungs. Whether he will ever
fully recover remains unclear. The day after, a 34-year-old
Algerian-Swedish citizen was apprehended
for the crime. The attacker, who was already suspected of another
violent subway crime, was identified and caught with the aid of the
general public, who recognized him from photographs published. He is now
being held in custody, pending trial.

June 2: A Swedish Jewish family told the Jerusalem Post
they have fled Sweden and taken up residency in Mallorca. Dan, whose
parents came to Sweden when thousands of Danish Jews were rescued during
World War II, said:

"All my life I'd been grateful to be part of a civilized
society. And, until about 2005, I felt blessed to live in a true social
democracy, where people willingly paid high taxes for a fine welfare
system and liberal values."Sure, the sunshine and lifestyle played some part in our decision
[to move], but the real reason was Sweden's changing demographics and
politics. The radical, left-wing establishment became totally obsessed
with multiculturalism and political correctness, which we did not need
reminding had been part of Swedish ethos for centuries."

His wife Karla added: "If you disagree with the establishment, you
are immediately called a racist or fascist, which we definitely are not.
At times I felt that this was what it must have been like to live in
the old Soviet Union."

June 2: Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg announced
that from now on, it would employ security guards around the clock at
Sahlgrenska's three hospitals. The head of security, Peter Alverman,
told Sveriges television:

"There are constant threats against our staff. But more
than anything, we are doing this because of increasing gang crime in
Gothenburg; it finds its way into our hospitals and causes concern among
staff as well as among other patients."

The guards will cost nine million kronor (over $1 million) a year --
money that could of course have been invested in health care.

June 3: Member of Parliament Daniel Sestrajcic was indicted
for disobeying a police officer. Sestrajcic is a member of the Left
Party, formerly known as the Communists. The crime was committed in
connection with a tent camp of protesting Palestinians being torn down
in Malmö, in October 2015. Sestrajcic, who was among the protesters, was
initially accused of trying to kick a police officer in the head, but
due to lack of evidence, those charges were dropped. However, as he
refused to obey police orders and leave the scene, the indictment for
disobeying police orders still stands. Mr. Sestrajcic denies the
charges.

June 5: Three men, sentenced by Falun District Court to four years in prison for aggravated rape in the town of Ludvika, were acquitted
by the Svea Court of Appeals. The prosecutor had appealed the original
verdict in the hope that the men would get a longer prison sentence, but
the Court of Appeals said that which of the men had done what could not
be proven. The three were therefore acquitted and the deportation order
revoked.

June 6: On Sweden's National Day, the Left Party decided to go out and congratulate
-- not the Swedish people -- but the Muslims in Sweden who were
starting the fasting month of Ramadan. Discussions ran hot on the
party's Facebook page. One person wrote: "I hope you do not end up in
the same situation as the Green Party. I fled from Islamists in Iran, and you are wishing them a happy Ramadan? My condolences."

June 6: The staff at an asylum house in Ludvika was forced to call the police
after a group of Muslims seeking asylum had become dissatisfied with
the meals served at the facility. They complained that the food was not
"Ramadan compliant," and the way they expressed their complaints
apparently frightened the staff. The police report is unclear about
exactly what transpired after that.June 7: It was reported
that Isa Dare, a 4-year-old boy who had been brought into Islamic State
territory by his parents, had now been smuggled into Sweden. The reason
was apparently to gain access to the free health care the Swedish
government decided to offer all illegal aliens in 2012 -- at the Swedish
taxpayers' expense. The boy's 24-year-old mother, Grace "Khadija" Dare,
was born in London. She was married to a Swedish citizen Abdul Ghameed
Abbas, also known as "Abu Bakr", who was killed in combat for ISIS in an
air raid in November 2014.

In February, the boy became well-known when he was featured in an
ISIS video, where he was shown activating a detonator and blowing up a
car with four prisoners inside. Posing by the burnt-out car, the
4-year-old yelled: "Allahu Akbar!"...

June 8: Three Somali men in their 20s, who locked a 14-year-old girl in a room and took turns raping her, received
very lenient sentences -- and all three avoided deportation. Two of the
men got two and a half years in prison. The third, who was also
convicted of drug-related crimes and drunk driving, got three years.
After serving their time, they will all be allowed to stay in Sweden,
even though they are not Swedish citizens.

June 9: A 19-year-old illegal alien from Somalia, who bit a police officer in the arm while being arrested, was acquitted
by the Umeå District Court. The court believed his version of events --
that he had acted in a state of panic due to traumatic memories from
his home country, and "bad experiences with the police in other
countries."

June 9: For years, the Swedish media has maintained that all who claim to be unaccompanied refugee children
are indeed children -- no matter how wrinkled and grizzled they are.
The notion that many of them lie about their age, in order to get
fast-tracked to asylum, has been dismissed as a racist myth. However, an
investigative report by the public-service Sveriges Radio, showed that many are in fact adults, resulting in grown men being put in the same facilities as teenagers and children.